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Parliament

The Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha under Part V (Art 79 to 122): composition, tenure, sessions, the legislative process, money versus financial versus ordinary bills, parliamentary devices, committees, and the special powers of each House

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PaperPaper ISubjectPolitySyllabusThe country's political system and Constitution of India, social systems and public administration, and regional and international security issues and human rights including its indicatorsImportanceHigh
ParliamentLok SabhaRajya SabhaMoney BillFinancial BillLegislative ProcessJoint SittingParliamentary Committees

Flagship anchor

Parliament is the supreme legislative organ of the Union and the institution to which the executive is accountable. It is established by Part V, Chapter II of the Constitution (Art 79 to 122) and consists of the President and two Houses: the Rajya Sabha (Council of States, the Upper House) and the Lok Sabha (House of the People, the Lower House). India follows a bicameral, parliamentary system in which the Lok Sabha is directly elected by universal adult franchise and the Council of Ministers is responsible to it, while the Rajya Sabha is a permanent, continuing chamber that represents the States and is never fully dissolved. For CAPF this is a static-fact goldmine: the strengths and constitutional caps of each House, the tenure rules, the qualifications and minimum ages, the sessions and devices (Question Hour, Zero Hour, adjournment, prorogation), the legislative process and the precise difference between a money bill (Art 110), a financial bill, and an ordinary bill, the joint sitting (Art 108), and the special powers each House holds alone. The NCERT Class XI text "Indian Constitution at Work", Chapter 5 (Legislature), and Laxmikanth's chapter on Parliament are the standard references.

Core concept: why two Houses

The Lok Sabha embodies the principle of direct democratic accountability: it is elected by the people, the government is formed from its majority, and only it can be the graveyard of a ministry through a no-confidence motion. The Rajya Sabha embodies federal representation: it gives the States a voice at the Centre and acts as a revising chamber that checks hasty legislation. The Rajya Sabha is also a permanent body (a "continuing chamber") so that legislative continuity survives the dissolution of the Lok Sabha. The two Houses are broadly equal on ordinary bills, but the Lok Sabha is dominant on financial matters and on the survival of the government.

Composition and tenure (the spine)

Feature Lok Sabha Rajya Sabha
Constitutional maximum strength 552 (530 from States + 20 from Union Territories + earlier 2 nominated Anglo-Indians, the nomination ended by the 104th Amendment, 2019) 250 (238 representatives of States and UTs + 12 nominated by the President)
Current working strength 543 elected 245 (233 elected + 12 nominated)
How chosen Direct election by universal adult franchise from territorial constituencies (Art 81) Indirect election by the elected members of State Legislative Assemblies using STV and proportional representation; UT representatives as prescribed by Parliament; 12 Presidential nominees (Art 80)
Term 5 years from the date of its first meeting unless dissolved earlier; extendable by up to one year at a time during a National Emergency (Art 83) Permanent body, not subject to dissolution; one-third of members retire every second year; each member serves 6 years
Presiding officer Speaker, assisted by the Deputy Speaker (Art 93) Chairman, who is the Vice-President of India (ex officio), assisted by the Deputy Chairman (Art 89)
Minimum age to be a member (Art 84) 25 years 30 years
Quorum (Art 100) One-tenth of the total number of members of the House One-tenth of the total number of members of the House
Salary and allowances Determined by Parliament (Art 106) Determined by Parliament (Art 106)

The President nominates 12 members to the Rajya Sabha for their special knowledge or practical experience in literature, science, art and social service (Art 80). The Rajya Sabha being a continuing chamber means a bill pending in it does not lapse on the dissolution of the Lok Sabha, whereas most bills pending in or originating in the Lok Sabha lapse.

Membership: qualifications, disqualifications and anti-defection

Item Fact
Qualifications (Art 84) Citizen of India; 25 years (Lok Sabha) or 30 years (Rajya Sabha); other qualifications prescribed by Parliament (Representation of the People Act, 1951)
Disqualifications (Art 102) Office of profit; unsound mind; undischarged insolvent; not a citizen; disqualified under any law (e.g. the Representation of the People Act, 1951)
Anti-defection Tenth Schedule (52nd Amendment, 1985); decided by the presiding officer; the "split" exception was removed by the 91st Amendment (2003), so now only a merger (two-thirds) is exempt
Vacation of seat Double membership, defection, absence for 60 days without permission (Art 101)

Sessions and key parliamentary terms

Term Meaning
Summoning The President summons each House; the maximum gap between two sessions of the same House cannot exceed six months (Art 85)
Three sessions (by convention) Budget session (February to May), Monsoon session (July to September), Winter session (November to December)
Sitting A part of a day when the House meets
Adjournment A suspension of work within a sitting or session for a specified time, ordered by the presiding officer
Adjournment sine die Termination of a sitting without naming a day for reassembly, by the presiding officer
Prorogation The end of a session, ordered by the President; pending notices lapse but pending bills do not
Dissolution The end of the life of the Lok Sabha only; the Rajya Sabha is never dissolved
Question Hour The first hour of a sitting, for questions to Ministers (starred, unstarred and short-notice questions)
Zero Hour The period immediately after Question Hour; an Indian innovation, not mentioned in the rules of procedure
Quorum One-tenth of the total membership (Art 100)

Parliamentary devices and motions (compare)

Device Purpose
Question Hour To extract information and hold Ministers to account
Zero Hour To raise matters of urgent public importance without notice (informal)
Adjournment motion To draw attention to a definite matter of urgent public importance, involving a censure of the government (Lok Sabha only)
No-confidence motion To express that the House has no confidence in the Council of Ministers (Lok Sabha only); needs the support of 50 members to be admitted
Motion of thanks On the President's address; its defeat amounts to the defeat of the government
Cut motions To reduce the amount of a demand for grant (policy cut, economy cut, token cut)
Censure motion To censure specific policies or Ministers; can be moved in either House
Calling attention motion To call a Minister's attention to a matter of urgent public importance (an Indian innovation)
Privilege motion To censure a Minister for a breach of parliamentary privilege

The legislative process

An ordinary bill (not a money bill) may be introduced in either House and must be passed by both Houses and receive the President's assent (Art 111) to become law. A bill passes through three readings: the first reading (introduction), the second reading (clause-by-clause consideration, often after committee scrutiny), and the third reading (passing). A constitution amendment bill follows Art 368, and a money bill follows the special procedure in Art 109 and Art 110.

Type of bill Where introduced Role of the Rajya Sabha Joint sitting
Ordinary bill Either House Equal power; can amend or reject; deadlock resolved by a joint sitting (Art 108) Available (Art 108)
Money bill (Art 110) Lok Sabha only, on the recommendation of the President Can only make recommendations; must return the bill within 14 days; the Lok Sabha may accept or reject the recommendations; effectively Lok Sabha dominance (Art 109) Not available
Financial bill Category I (Art 117(1)): Lok Sabha only, with the President's recommendation; Category II (Art 117(3)): either House Like an ordinary bill for Category II and the non-money portions of Category I Available
Constitution amendment bill (Art 368) Either House Must pass each House separately by a special majority; no provision for a joint sitting Not available

A money bill is certified as such by the Speaker of the Lok Sabha, whose decision is final and cannot be questioned in any court (Art 110(3) and Art 110(4)). A joint sitting (Art 108) is summoned by the President to resolve a deadlock on an ordinary or financial bill, is presided over by the Speaker of the Lok Sabha (in his absence the Deputy Speaker, then the Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha; the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha never presides), and is decided by a simple majority of the total number of members present and voting. A joint sitting is not available for a money bill or a constitution amendment bill.

Money bill versus financial bill (the highest-yield confusion)

  • A money bill (Art 110) deals only with matters listed in Art 110: imposition, abolition, remission, alteration or regulation of any tax; borrowing by the Government; custody of the Consolidated Fund or the Contingency Fund; appropriation of money out of the Consolidated Fund; declaring expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund; receipt of money on account of the Consolidated Fund or the public account; or matters incidental to these. It can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha, only on the President's recommendation, and is certified by the Speaker.
  • A financial bill contains provisions dealing with matters under Art 110 and other matters. Financial Bill (I) under Art 117(1) is like a money bill in its introduction (Lok Sabha only, President's recommendation) but is treated like an ordinary bill in all other respects. Financial Bill (II) under Art 117(3) merely involves expenditure from the Consolidated Fund and can be introduced in either House.
  • The key test: every money bill is a financial bill, but not every financial bill is a money bill. The Speaker's certificate is conclusive only for a money bill.

Special powers of each House

Lok Sabha alone Rajya Sabha alone
A money bill can be introduced only here (Art 110) Can authorise Parliament to make a law on a State List subject in the national interest (Art 249), by a two-thirds resolution
A no-confidence motion against the Council of Ministers lies only here (Art 75) Can authorise the creation of a new All-India Service common to the Union and the States (Art 312), by a two-thirds resolution
The Speaker certifies a money bill (Art 110(3)) Represents the States in the federal scheme
The fate of recommendations on a money bill is decided here (Art 109) A continuing chamber, never dissolved (Art 83)
The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to it Approval of an emergency proclamation can continue through it when the Lok Sabha is dissolved

Parliamentary committees (high-frequency)

Committee Composition / head Function
Public Accounts Committee (PAC) 22 members (15 Lok Sabha + 7 Rajya Sabha); a Minister cannot be a member; the Chairman is from the Opposition by convention Examines the CAG's audit reports on appropriation accounts
Estimates Committee 30 members, all from the Lok Sabha Examines the estimates in the Budget and suggests economies
Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU) 22 members (15 Lok Sabha + 7 Rajya Sabha) Examines the reports and accounts of public-sector undertakings
Departmentally Related Standing Committees 24 committees; each 31 members (21 Lok Sabha + 10 Rajya Sabha) Detailed scrutiny of demands for grants, bills and policy of each ministry
Business Advisory Committee Presiding officer chairs Allocates time for legislative and other business

These three financial committees (PAC, Estimates, COPU) are the core of legislative financial control; the PAC works closely with the CAG (Art 148). See constitutional and statutory bodies.

Important Articles

Article Subject
Art 79 Constitution of Parliament (President + two Houses)
Art 80 Composition of the Rajya Sabha
Art 81 Composition of the Lok Sabha
Art 83 Duration of the Houses (5-year Lok Sabha, permanent Rajya Sabha)
Art 84 Qualifications for membership
Art 85 Sessions, prorogation and dissolution (the six-month rule)
Art 93 The Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha
Art 100 Voting in Houses and quorum
Art 102 Disqualifications for membership
Art 105 Powers, privileges and immunities of Parliament and its members
Art 108 Joint sitting of the two Houses
Art 109 Special procedure in respect of money bills
Art 110 Definition of a money bill
Art 111 Assent to bills
Art 112 Annual financial statement (the Budget)
Art 117 Financial bills
Art 123 Ordinance power of the President
Art 249 Rajya Sabha power to legislate on a State subject
Art 312 Rajya Sabha power to create a new All-India Service

Static facts to memorise

Fact Value
Lok Sabha constitutional cap 552
Lok Sabha current strength 543 elected
Rajya Sabha constitutional cap 250 (238 + 12)
Rajya Sabha current strength 245 (233 + 12)
Minimum age, Lok Sabha / Rajya Sabha 25 / 30
Lok Sabha term 5 years (extendable by 1 year during emergency)
Rajya Sabha member term 6 years; one-third retire every 2 years
Quorum One-tenth (Art 100)
Maximum gap between sessions 6 months (Art 85)
Money bill return deadline (Rajya Sabha) 14 days
Members needed to admit a no-confidence motion 50
Anglo-Indian nomination ended 104th Amendment, 2019

Security and human-rights angle (CAPF-distinctive)

  • Parliament has the exclusive power to legislate on defence, the armed forces, the deployment of any armed force in aid of the civil power, and the Central Bureau of Intelligence and Investigation (Union List entries). Statutes such as the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, and the National Security Act, 1980, are enacted by Parliament.
  • Under Art 33, Parliament may restrict or abrogate the Fundamental Rights of members of the armed forces, paramilitary forces, police and intelligence organisations to ensure discipline; under Art 34 it may indemnify acts done in the maintenance of order under martial law.
  • Parliamentary control of the Budget (Art 112) and the demands for grants is how elected, civilian control over the security establishment is exercised. No money can be drawn from the Consolidated Fund of India without an appropriation made by law (Art 114), and the CAG's audit reports are scrutinised by the Public Accounts Committee.
  • Members enjoy parliamentary privileges (Art 105), including freedom of speech in the House, which secures uninhibited debate on security and human-rights matters.

How CAPF asks it

Parliament questions are crisp and factual: single-correct on strengths and ages, "how many statements are correct" on bill procedure, Article-to-subject matching, and assertion-reason on the Lok Sabha's financial dominance.

Authored practice

Q1Which of the following is true of a money bill?
  1. AIt can be introduced in either House
  2. BThe Rajya Sabha can reject it
  3. CIt must be returned by the Rajya Sabha within 14 days
  4. DIt is certified by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha Answer:
  5. C. A money bill is introduced only in the Lok Sabha, certified by the Speaker, and the Rajya Sabha can only recommend and must return it within 14 days (Art 109, 110).
Q2Consider the following statements: The Rajya Sabha is never dissolved. One-third of the members of the Rajya Sabha retire every two years. The Vice-President is the ex officio Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. How many are correct?
  1. AOnly one
  2. BOnly two
  3. CAll three
  4. DNone Answer:
  5. CAll three.
Q3A joint sitting of the two Houses (Art 108) is presided over by:
  1. AThe President
  2. BThe Vice-President
  3. CThe Speaker of the Lok Sabha
  4. DThe Chairman of the Rajya Sabha Answer:
  5. CThe Speaker of the Lok Sabha. A joint sitting is not available for money bills or Art 368 amendment bills.
Q4Match the Article with its subject: 1. Art 108 2. Art 110 3. Art 112 4. Art 249 with A. Budget B. Joint sitting C. Money bill D. Rajya Sabha legislating on a State subject.
  1. A1-B 2-C 3-A 4-D
  2. B1-C 2-B 3-A 4-D
  3. C1-B 2-A 3-C 4-D
  4. D1-D 2-C 3-A 4-B Answer:
  5. A.
Q5Assertion
  1. A: A money bill can originate only in the Lok Sabha. Reason (R): The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha.
  2. ABoth true, R explains A
  3. BBoth true, R does not explain A
  4. CA true, R false
  5. DA false, R true Answer:
  6. B. Both are true, but the money-bill rule flows from the Lok Sabha's status as the directly elected, financially accountable House rather than directly from collective responsibility.

Common confusion

  • Money bill (Art 110) versus financial bill (Art 117): every money bill is a financial bill, but not every financial bill is a money bill; the Speaker's certificate is conclusive only for a money bill.
  • Prorogation versus adjournment versus dissolution: adjournment is by the presiding officer within a session; prorogation ends a session and is by the President; dissolution ends the Lok Sabha only.
  • Question Hour versus Zero Hour: Question Hour is the first hour and is regulated; Zero Hour follows it and is an unregulated Indian innovation.
  • Lapsing of bills: a bill pending in the Lok Sabha lapses on dissolution; a bill pending in the Rajya Sabha (and not passed by the Lok Sabha) does not lapse.
  • Joint sitting: presided over by the Speaker, never the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha; not for money bills or amendment bills.
  • Rajya Sabha's two unique powers: Art 249 (legislate on a State subject) and Art 312 (new All-India Service); both require a two-thirds resolution.

Memory hook

  • "79 to 122" brackets the whole chapter; remember the 80-81 pair: 80 Rajya Sabha, 81 Lok Sabha.
  • "108-109-110-111-112": joint sitting, money-bill procedure, money-bill definition, assent, Budget, in numerical order.
  • "25 and 30": Lok Sabha minimum age 25, Rajya Sabha 30 (the Upper House needs older members).
  • "12-12-14-50": 12 nominated members; 12 sessions (no, ignore), use instead: the Rajya Sabha must return a money bill in 14 days, and 50 members are needed to admit a no-confidence motion.
  • "RS = 249 + 312" for the Rajya Sabha's two exclusive powers.

Night before

  • Parliament = President + Rajya Sabha + Lok Sabha (Art 79).
  • Lok Sabha cap 552 (543 elected); Rajya Sabha cap 250 (245 working: 233 + 12).
  • Lok Sabha term 5 years (Art 83); Rajya Sabha permanent, members serve 6 years, one-third retire every 2 years.
  • Minimum age 25 (Lok Sabha) and 30 (Rajya Sabha); quorum one-tenth (Art 100); six-month gap rule (Art 85).
  • Money bill (Art 110): Lok Sabha only, Speaker certifies, Rajya Sabha returns in 14 days with only recommendations.
  • Joint sitting (Art 108) presided over by the Speaker; not for money or amendment bills.
  • A no-confidence motion lies only in the Lok Sabha; the Rajya Sabha alone uses Art 249 and Art 312.
  • 104th Amendment (2019) ended the Anglo-Indian nomination.

One-line recall

  • Parliament: President + two Houses (Art 79).
  • Lok Sabha cap 552, current 543; Rajya Sabha cap 250, current 245 (233 elected + 12 nominated).
  • Lok Sabha directly elected (Art 81); Rajya Sabha elected by State Assemblies via STV and proportional representation (Art 80).
  • Lok Sabha term 5 years, extendable by 1 year during a National Emergency (Art 83).
  • Rajya Sabha is a continuing chamber; one-third retire every 2 years; each member serves 6 years.
  • Speaker presides over the Lok Sabha (Art 93); the Vice-President is the ex officio Chairman of the Rajya Sabha (Art 89).
  • Minimum age 25 (Lok Sabha) and 30 (Rajya Sabha); quorum one-tenth (Art 100).
  • Maximum gap between sessions is six months (Art 85); three sessions by convention.
  • Zero Hour is an Indian innovation; Question Hour is the regulated first hour.
  • Money bill (Art 110) certified by the Speaker; Rajya Sabha returns it within 14 days.
  • Financial bill (Art 117) is wider than a money bill; not every financial bill is a money bill.
  • Joint sitting (Art 108) presided over by the Speaker; not for money or Art 368 bills.
  • A no-confidence motion needs 50 members to be admitted and lies only in the Lok Sabha.
  • Rajya Sabha alone can act under Art 249 (State subject) and Art 312 (new All-India Service).
  • PAC has 22 members, examines CAG reports, and is chaired by the Opposition by convention.
  • 24 Departmentally Related Standing Committees, each 31 members.
  • Bills pending in the Lok Sabha lapse on dissolution; those pending only in the Rajya Sabha do not.
  • Anti-defection is in the Tenth Schedule (52nd Amendment, 1985); the split exception was deleted by the 91st Amendment.
  • Art 33 lets Parliament restrict Fundamental Rights of the forces; Art 34 indemnifies martial-law acts.

Glossary

  • Bicameralism: a legislature with two chambers (Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha).
  • Continuing chamber: a House that is never wholly dissolved (the Rajya Sabha).
  • Universal adult franchise: the right of every adult citizen to vote, the basis of Lok Sabha elections.
  • Single transferable vote: the preferential method used to elect Rajya Sabha members.
  • Quorum: the minimum members required to conduct business, one-tenth of the House (Art 100).
  • Prorogation: the formal end of a session by the President.
  • Dissolution: the end of the life of the Lok Sabha.
  • Adjournment sine die: closing a sitting without fixing a date to reconvene.
  • Money bill: a bill confined to the matters in Art 110, certified by the Speaker.
  • Financial bill: a bill dealing with revenue or expenditure that goes beyond Art 110 matters.
  • Joint sitting: the combined meeting of both Houses to resolve a deadlock (Art 108).
  • Cut motion: a motion to reduce a demand for grant.
  • No-confidence motion: a motion expressing the Lok Sabha's lack of confidence in the government.
  • Zero Hour: the unregulated period after Question Hour, an Indian innovation.
  • Anti-defection law: the Tenth Schedule rules disqualifying members for defection.
  • Parliamentary privilege: the special rights and immunities of the Houses and members (Art 105).
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